"You see a lot of teams, you don't have those guys who can catch 150 games, 160 games anymore," Martinez said. "You don't. To have two guys like that on your roster, it's a really good problem to have."

"They’re both going to play a lot. They understand that. How we work it? We’ll figure it out," he said.

And fortunately for the Nats' skipper, that arrangement works just fine for both Gomes and Suzuki.

“Oh, I don’t even care. At this point in my career, picking a team that has a chance to win a World Series is very important to me,” Suzuki said.

"That's just something that if we make that a (big) deal, this team is not going to go forward. I just think we need to both be ready whenever our names get called," Gomes said Saturday.

"(There's) two guys that have done it with some good pitching staffs, and it’s only going to benefit (the team). But if we put the playing time thing ahead of ourselves, it’s not going to be beneficial for the team," he said.

To that end, Martinez also indicated he is willing to do the sensible thing and pinch hit one catcher for the other when the opportunity is there.

Davey Martinez said he’s going to pinch-hit the other catcher when the opportunity arises, eschewing the “but who will catch if someone is hurt?!” idea, and multiple reporters thought, “FINALLY” upon hearing a manager say this.

And with talent like that to work with, Suzuki isn't worried about his own playing time, just winning.

“And like I told (General Manager Mike Rizzo) and Davey from day 1, ‘Whatever you need me to do, I’ll be ready, whether it’s 50 games, 60, whatever. However many games you want me to catch,’" Suzuki said. "If I can help the team win every time I’m out there, that’s great. I just want to win at this point in my career. I know the clock’s ticking a little bit. I’m not getting younger. That World Series is getting to be pretty important right now.”